Category Archives: research

Sarah Turner’s Public House to be screened at Gulbenkian as part of national tour

Public House, Sarah Turner 2015.

 

Directed by award-winning artist Sarah Turner, SMFA’s Reader in Fine Art and Director of Research, the Grierson Award nominated film Public House (96 mins, 2016) which premiered in October 2015 at the BFI London Film Festival, and has also been screened at Tate Britain and the ICA, is being toured nationally through Picture House and other cinemas, including the Gulbenkian Cinema on 21 June at 6.45pm. Organized and sponsored by Kent’s Interdisciplinary Centre for Spatial Studies (UKC) and the Gulbenkian Cinema, the film screening will be followed by a Q&A with Sarah Turner, chaired by Thanos Zartaloudis (Kent Law School; AA School of Architecture and Co-director of KISS).

The film also tours to many venues that include Liverpool, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Brighton, Southampton, Norwich, and London. A gallery tour is planned for late summer/autumn. More info here: http://www.thepublichousefilm.co.uk/screenings.html
Website: http://www.thepublichousefilm.co.uk/index.html

 

Related posts:
https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=2393
https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=2154

SMFA PhD student Moyra Derby has article published in the Journal of Contemporary Painting

Table Painting, 2017. Image by Moyra Derby

 

An article by School of Music and Fine Art Graduate Teaching Assistant and PhD student, Moyra Derby, has been published in the Journal of Contemporary Painting. ‘Constraints between picture and painting: Some considerations at a distance’ appears in Volume 2, Issue 2: http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=22696/

A Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a Founding Trustee of Crate Studio & Project Space in Margate, Moyra studied at University of Ulster at Belfast, Cheltenham School of Art and the Royal College of Art. Currently undertaking a practice based PhD in Fine Art with the support of a Vice Chancellors Scholarship, her research focuses on processes of attention as a productive context for contemporary painting.

Moyra also has work included in upcoming show Fully Awake from 6th – 21st April at blip blip blip, East Street Arts Patrick Studios, St. Mary’s Lane Leeds LS9 7EH. The Private View is 5th April 6-8pm, and the show is curated by Ian Hartshorne & Sean Kaye for Teaching Painting.

 

More info: http://www.blipblipblip.co.uk
http://www.art.mmu.ac.uk/profile/ihartshorne/projectdetails/884

Shona Illingworth’s work featured in The Lancet Neurology

Time Present, 2016. Image by Shona Illingworth

No past, no future: studies in the art and science of memory is a fascinating article by Jules Morgan in The Lancet Neurology which explores artist and SMFA Fine Art Reader Shona Illingworth’s interdisciplinary research. It is out shortly in print but available to view online here: http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laneur/article/PIIS1474-4422(17)30054-6/fulltext

Director of Graduate Studies in the School of Music and Fine Art, Shona Illingworth was shortlisted for the prestigious 2016 Jarman Award, and her widely exhibited work across sound, film, video, photography, drawing and painting combines interdisciplinary research (particularly with emerging neuropsychological models of memory and critical approaches to memory studies) with publicly engaged practice.

 

Related post: https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=2410

Adam Chodzko speaks at the British Academy and exhibits in Hull

Adam Chodzko, 2017. Photo by Clay Barnard Chodzko

 

On March 13th, SMFA Senior Lecturer in Fine Art and acclaimed award-wining contemporary visual artist, Adam Chodzko, joins Cornelia Parker OBE, RA and Bob and Roberta Smith, RA for a panel discussion of former British School at Rome artist award-holders as they reflect on the impact of their time in Rome on their subsequent careers. Chaired by celebrated art historian, writer and curator Dawn Ades, the event Inspiring visual art: a view from Rome takes place from 6.00pm-7.30pm in London – more info here http://www.britac.ac.uk/events/inspiring-visual-art-view-rome

From April 1st, Adam Chodzko also has work in group exhibition Offshore: Artists Explore the Sea at Ferens Art Gallery and Hull Maritime Museum, until 28th August and Sounding the Sea Symposium 15 – 16 June. This major new exhibition, part of Hull UK City of Culture 2017, is curated by Invisible Dust and will include new and existing works by internationally-renowned artists. It examines people’s relationship to the oceans as a source of food and energy, a dumping ground for waste and the reference point for many of our most haunting and significant myths.  Through a range of media these artists pose questions about our connection to and use of the sea. Invisible Dust has developed relationships between some of the artists with marine biologists and ecologists from OxfordSouthampton and Hull Universities. Being informed and influenced by the science is providing new stimulus to the artists’ ideas.  More info at http://invisibledust.com/project/offshore-artists-explore-the-sea/

Exhibiting internationally since 1991, Adam Chodzko works across media, from video installation to subtle interventions, with a practice that is situated both within the gallery and the wider public realm. http://www.adamchodzko.com

SoundImageSound International Festival of New Music at SMFA

 

On Tuesday 7th March at 5pm in the Clock Tower Lecture Theatre, School of Music and Fine Art, there will be a screening of pieces from the SoundImageSound International Festival of New Music. Robert Coburn, Conservatory of Music, University of the Pacific, will present the works and give a short pre-concert talk.  This event is FREE to attend!

From 2003 to 2014, the SoundImageSound International Festival of New Music and Visual Image presented annual performances of new works by composers and visual artists who merged sound and image in a form of inter/multi-media. Curated from an open call for works, SIS featured a widely diverse collection of styles and media from artists across all continents. 

Robert Coburn 
Influenced by minimal visual art and traditional Japanese music and theatre, composer, performer, and sound artist Robert Coburn merges minimal sound and silence in a perceptual experience of time and personal memory.  His compositions often integrate field recordings with live performance and video. He was a founding member of the World Forum for Acoustic Ecology and has created gallery installations and permanent soundworks as public art throughout the US.

Works to be presented:
Polis (2003 – 04),  Joseph Harchanko/John Fillwalk,  9′
Lines (2006),  Stephanie Loveless,  9′ 30″
Boreales (2008-09),  Jean Piche,  10′ 30″
Juicy (2009),  Jaroslaw Kapuscinski,  10′ 44″
The Mechanism of Spring (2010),  Atsushi Wada,  4′ 20″
Kaze no Yume Part 1 (2012),  Robert Coburn,  10′

Shona Illingworth’s Time Present in contemporary art exhibition

Time Present, 2016. Image by Shona Illingworth

 

Fine Art Reader and Director of Graduate Studies in the School of Music and Fine Art work, artist Shona Illingworth’s work, Time Present  (2016) opens in a new exhibition called Turning Point at the Sayle Gallery, Douglas, Isle of Man from 25 Feb – 26 March. Featuring boundary pushing contemporary artwork by international artists Keith McIntyre, Kevin Atherton, Mark Wallinger and Susan Collins, the exhibition is curated by Helen Fox, Programme Manager for Art, Design and Media at University College Isle of Man.

Time Present explores memory, and individual and cultural amnesia.

Shortlisted for the prestigious 2016 Jarman Award, the widely exhibited Illingworth works across sound, film, video, photography, drawing and painting. Her work combines interdisciplinary research (particularly with emerging neuropsychological models of memory and critical approaches to memory studies) with publicly engaged practice.

 

More info here: https://issuu.com/galleryisleofman/docs/february_2017___the_this_girl_can_i/30

Related post: https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/fineart/news.html?view=2213

SMFA Lecturer Dr Ben Curry talks music, memory and identity on Radio Kent

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In response to recent statistics that guests on Radio 4’s long running Desert Island Discs who choose classical music are now in the minority, School Music and Fine Art  Lecturer Dr Ben Curry was interviewed by Radio Kent’s Julia George on his reaction. A fascinating discussion followed, which touched on ways of listening, memory and identity in relation to how we choose and perceive music.

You can listen to the interview by going to our Research page(Scroll down and you will find the interview on the right hand side under Sarah Turner’s talk about Public House).

Sarah Turner talks about her film Public House on BBC Radio 4 on New Year’s Eve

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Public House, 2015. Sara Turner

 

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on 20th November, A Vision on Peckham Rye, in which Sarah Turner, Director of Research in the School of Music and Fine Art, talks about recreating Blake’s ‘Vision of Angels’ for her Grierson award nominated film Public House,  will be repeated on Radio 4 on New Year’s Eve.

The programme also features Dulwich Folk Choir performing music composed for the film by SMFA’s Director of Marketing and Recruitment and Music Lecturer, composer Duncan MacLeod.

The broadcast is available on i-player here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b082wwlm

More info on Public House here https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=2154.

Shona Illingworth interviewed on Radio 4’s All in the Mind

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Lesions in the Landscape, 2015. Shona Illingworth, installation view, FACT, Liverpool. Photo by Jon Barraclough.

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The School of Music and Fine Art’s Director of Graduate Studies and Reader in Fine Art Shona Illingworth, has been interviewed by presenter Claudia Hammond for BBC Radio 4’s All In The Mind, which will feature Shona’s exhibition Lesions in the Landscape, a powerful multi-screen installation, exploring the impact of amnesia and the erasure of individual and cultural memory.

The programme will be broadcast at 9pm on Tuesday 25th October then repeated at 3.30pm on Wednesday 26th October. You can also listen back online or on BBC iPlayer. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qxx9/broadcasts/upcoming

Shona is shortlisted for the prestigious 2016 Film London Jarman Award.

For more on this amazing work, which features in a 2 symposium this weekend and is currently on show at The Gallery in London, see https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=2310

Professor Tim Howle special guest at Sound/Image Colloquium exploring sonic and audio-visual practice

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Professor Tim Howle, Director of Programmes (Music) and Professor of Contemporary Music in the School of Music and Fine Art,  will be a special guest at the Sound/Image Colloquium: Exploring sonic and audio-visual practice on 12th and 13th November at the University of Greenwich, and will be delivering a keynote paper.

The Sound/Image Colloquium is interested in exploring the relationships between sounds and images, and the images which sounds can construct by themselves.  Through a series of complementary strands – talks, screenings, loudspeaker orchestra concerts – artists and experts will investigate sound and sound-image phenomena.

The annual event, curated by Andrew Hill, is hosted by Creative Professions and Digital Arts.

 

More details at: http://blogs.gre.ac.uk/greenwichresearchscene/2016/07/21/sound-image-conference/

For more information about Professor Howle, go to https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/staff/staff-profiles/school/11Howle.html